Consider this: Who are the 1 percent?

A lengthy profile of the top 1 percent of earners in America — those targeted by the Occupy movement who earn at least $380,000 per year — turned up some facts that may surprise you.

For one thing, they’re not all Wall Street tycoons. All the financial managers, account executives and other specialists don’t match the percentage of wealthy doctors. The next-largest category is CEOs and public administrators, followed by lawyers.

In contrast to the stereotype of the idle rich, the wealthiest Americans tend to be hard workers — 50-hour weeks are common. The New York Times also calculated how much income you needed to rank in the top 1 percent of your community. The top figure was $908,000 in the New York commuter city of Stamford, Conn. The figure for Syracuse: $305,000.

Nearly all the 1-percenters the Times interviewed agree the wealthy ought to do more to ease the nation’s financial squeeze, and that they have an unfair advantage, though they differ on how to achieve more fairness. One thing most of them agree on, however, is that they’re getting a bad rap.

“I’m not hurting anyone. I’m helping a lot of people,” said a Long Island entrepreneur. “It’s not very popular to be in the 1 percent these days, is it?